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           Lecture III:  Pardes:  From Sefiroth to
                         Demonology
                    Monday 22 April 1991
                              
                              
 We have already examined two paradigms for
reading the story of the entry into Pardes.
Tonight, I want to talk about two others:
the Theosophical and Theurgical paradigms.
The paradigms already covered in the first
two lectures, different though they were,
had a common feature:  both deal with inner
experience, whether intellectualistic or
ecstatic.  The drama takes place in
consciousness.  Even if ecstasy involves
possession, it is still occurring in human
consciousness.
 The Divine is not affected by the entrance
of the philosopher or mystic into the
Pardes.  This activity only affects the
human intellect or soul - not the Divine.
 The two other paradigms also have an
assumption in common:  that the entry into
the Pardes has a deep effect on the non-
human realms.  In the Theosophical paradigm,
the Divine is not a simple entity, but a
system of divine powers.  The entry into the
Pardes influences the relationships between
these divine powers.  The other paradigm,
the Theurgic, involves an influence on, or
struggle with, the demonic realm.  These two
may seem quite different, but, according the
Kabbalah, the demonic and the Divine share a
common anthropomorphic structure.  The
Sefiroth are prototypes for the demonic as
well as the Divine realms.  Both paradigms,
then, deal with attempts to affect the
structure and relationship of external
entities, either by inducing harmony in the
Divine world or by combatting some aspect of
the demonic world.
 In both cases, the Pardes again represents
a danger zone:  an aspect of these realms
that is too strong for most mortals.  And
both approaches, in their reading of the
Pardes story, take as the key figure that of
Akher, or Elisha ben Abuya, the heretical
figure, he who "peeked and cut the shoots."
He is seen as one who was unable to
understand appropriately either the
sefirotic or Demonic realm.
 I would like to deal first with the
demonic, so that we can finish with
something more positive.  The basic
assumption of this type of Kabbalah became
important around the end of the Thirteenth
Century (it is not generally found earlier):
that the knowledge of the structure of the
demonic is the most profound form of
Kabbalah, the most recondite.  A commonly
used name for members of this tradition can
be translated, "The More Profound
Kabbalists."  Their texts run to long lists
of evil angels, and detailed discussions of
the relationships between the demonic and
the Divine.  The tradition also includes a
strong reinterpretation of the Pardes story.
In this tradition, it was held (e.g. by
Moses de Leon) that it was a religious duty
to know, and pursue knowledge of, the
demonic world - but not to be immersed in
it.  Only when one has the ability to
distinguish good and evil can one truly know
the good, and truly worship God.  But this
must be done so that one is not attracted by
or immersed in or inundated by the demonic
realm.
 Thus, one also finds in these texts long
lists of sinners, with Akher as the last
major figure.
 These sinners were those who were attracted
by the demonic realm, who were, in essence,
sexually seduced by it.  They were those who
had become immersed in a certain commerce or
intercourse with demonic sexual figures.
Thus one finds Adam (seduced by Lilith), and
Solomon, whose "thousand wives" were
regarded as a multitude of demonic powers,
and Balaam, said to have had intercourse
with his ass.  These figures were all
seduced into sin.  Sexual attraction, then,
becomes an explanation of the power of the
Pardes, which one must understand but not be
immersed in.
 Why did this paradigm arise at the end of
the Thirteenth Century?  Most of the
Kabbalists who used it lived in Castile,
where there was a certain phenomenon of Jews
having sexual relations with Christians, or,
more often, with Muslims.  There are
discussions of this phenomenon in de Leon
and others:  the fascination with the Other
is there portrayed as a demonic attraction.
 Now, there is a basic pattern well-known in
the history of religions, often called
"katabasis:"  the descent into hell to
perform some rite.  Usually the katabasis is
a salvific descent - an attempt to rescue
some of the dwellers in hell (though
generally not demons).  But in Cabalistic
tradition it often ends negatively:  the
person who makes the descent is unable to
surface.  Already in the Talmud Ben Abuya is
described as being in some relationship with
a prostitute.  Kabbalists exploited this to
portray him as indulging in sexual
transgression.
 The others are portrayed as more
successful.  R. Aqiva entered, but did not
get involved.  A parallel was seen with
Abraham, who descended into Egypt (often
taken as a type of the demonic realm) and
who was able to emerge in peace.  Another
similarity was found with Noah, who
experienced the Flood but who came out in
safety.  This is, in other words, a
typological approach.  The Pardes story is
used to summarize certain prototypical
stories from Adam onward.  That the
interpretations are typological is obvious
because of the range of figures adduced to
make the point.  One of the most exciting is
the projection of the Pardes story onto the
Biblical story of Samson.  At the beginning,
Samson is able into a relationship with
Delilah, and ultimately he is able to
destroy the realm of evil.  Samson met
Delilah in the equivalent of Pardes:  in a
vineyard.  All of these are instances that
indicate that medieval Jewish hermeneutics
was in fact very typological - which quite
contradicts the claims of certain modern
scholars, who see the typological approach
as typical of scholastic philosophy, and not
at all Jewish.
 This approach remains, from the Thirteenth
Century up through the Lurianic Kabbalah,
where it reaches an apex.
 
 The other paradigm I wish to consider
addresses itself to the Sephirotic realm.
This paradigm was typical of those
Kabbalists who assumed that the crucial
issue was to induce or re-induce the harmony
in the Divine spheres which had been
disturbed by primordial human transgression.
There were two metaphors for the Divine:
that of the Tree, and (to simplify) the
anthropomorphic one of the couple.  In the
latter, the first nine Sefiroth were taken
as male, and the last as female.  The basic
sin of Akher was to break the connection
between the first nine and the tenth (seen
as the shoots, or as a female figure).  The
challenge created by this transgression is
to see the Pardes as a Garden.
 In Paradise, the transgression was the
separation of the fruit from the tree,
projected on high.  The transgression was
not eating, but separating one aspect of the
Divine from the rest.  By separating the
fruit from the Tree, Akher (or Adam)
separated aspects of the Divine from each
other, thus inducing a disturbance in the
Divine realm often referred to as "the
devastation of the plantations."  Even more
dangerously, by affecting the Divine world
in this way you are prone to accept the
assumption that there are two different
powers, to believe no longer in a Unity on
high, but a Duality.  In the moment of
separation, in other words, the possibility
of a dualistic misunderstanding arises.  The
challenge, then, is to heal this rupture,
which took place in the primordial era.
 The work of restoring the lost unity is
open to Jews in general, but especially to
the Kabbalists, by the use of Jewish ritual,
which is seen as a Theurgical technique,
i.e., one able to influence God (which is
one way of understanding the word
"theurgy").  According to the Theosophical-
Theurgical Kabbalah, the major role of the
Kabbalist is to restore the organic unity
between the Divine powers.
  It is, in a sense, the transposition of
the mystical project into another key, the
attempt to repair the rupture in the Divine
(rather than between the human and the
Divine) induced by human transgression.
 R. Aqiva, then, was seen as one who was
able to act ritualistically to restore the
relationship between the two last Sefiroth
[the ninth and the tenth].  This projected a
certain type of sacramental value onto
Jewish ritual which was absent in other
forms of Kabbalah or in Maimonides.  In
other traditions, the individual was the
center.  But in these demonic or Sephirotic
pursuits, the focus is on repairing the
cosmos, on inducing a more harmonious state
in general, in the nation, and in the
cosmos.
 
 The last issue I wish to consider involves
making a comparative observation about the
distribution of the discussions of the
Pardes story.  It is found of course in
ancient literature, but in the medieval
period, surprisingly (and this surprised me
when I first looked into this question),
only the Sephardi were interested in it.  It
does not appear in medieval Ashkenazi texts.
The Sephardic literature is less interested
in the Talmud and the Hekhaloth, and more
interested in the Pardes.  It was in the
Sephardi literature that the interpretations
we have discussed were invented.
 Now, Sephardi culture was in much more open
contact with alien cultures, and thus more
endangered.  Muslim (and even Christian
philosophic/scholastic) culture were
perceived as a danger, and openness to it
was experienced as a danger - a dangerous
ideal.
 Ashkenazi society of the period was closed;
there was not much scholarly interchange
with other cultures.  Ashkenazi culture was
very confident, and it was not open
precisely because it was confident that
Jewish culture was the highest form of
religion.  Thus for it there was no
dangerous ideal.  The story of "Entering
Pardes," then, did not meet any cultural
need, because there was no sense of cultural
danger.  Even later, in the Sixteenth
Century, when the Pardes story is discussed,
the discussion is inspired by Sephardi
literature, and this is true even up to the
mid-Eighteenth Century.  But by the
Nineteenth Century, a deep change has
occurred:  all interest in the Pardes theme
is found among the Ashkenazim.  This, I
think, is connected with the entry into
interaction with general culture, with the
Enlightenment.  There came to be a need to
explain the meaning of this interaction.
Elisha ben Abuya, in fact, could be seen as
one of the major protagonists in much modern
Hebrew literature.
 It was, then, cultural exposure and
openness which invoked, provoked, and evoked
(all three!) the interest in the Pardes
theme.  The Pardes story explained the
encounter between the Jewish and other
mentalities.  In fact, this may also be the
explanation for the Talmudic treatment of
Elisha Akher, especially if he is taken as a
Gnostic, as modern scholars often do.  Even
the early forms of his story, then, would
typify the encounter of Jews with a general
culture - in this case, a Gnostic culture.
Akher would be someone open to a non-Jewish
type of culture - though in fact it is hard
to be sure which of many it might have been.
 There area as many different scholarly
Elishas as there were contemporary cultures.
Akher typifies a situation in which there is
a willingness to be open, but a danger of
being unable to return to one's patrimony.
There is a danger that one will be seduced
by, and remain immersed in, philosophy,
Gnosticism, Neoplatonism ... or whatnot.
His plight is used to describe an
existential situation in which Jews found
themselves between Judaism and a general
culture that fascinated and endangered them.
                              
                              
                          Questions
                              
Q:  Is there any connection between these
 interpretations and a current of
 opposition to Maimonides?
A:  Well, I don't believe in single
 explanations.  All of these Cabalistic
 explanations became published or exposed
 after the period of Maimonides.  Most
 Cabalists were probably acquainted with
 Maimonides.  But this was probably not so
 much a matter of a silent polemic with
 Maimonides as a matter of a tension
 between a ritualistic and experiential
 approach and an intellectualistic one
 (often regarded as alien).

Q:  One interpretation of the Pardes theme
 is of an entry into the demonic sphere.
 How was this combat carried out?
A:  By the commandments - mitzvoth.  The
 idea was to explore, and attempt to
 subdue, by performing the Commandments in
 a Cabalistic manner, thus extricating some
 part of the demonic world.  In the
 Sephirotic realm, by means of the positive
 commandments, one worked to unify the
 Divine world; by observing the
 prohibitions, one could subdue (but not
 eradicate) the demonic world.  The
 Kabbalists werequite uneasy with the idea
 of destroying an aspect of reality, even a
 demonic one.  As a part of reality it was
 needed, and had to be not destroyed but
 managed or coped with.

Q:  How is the Pardes story understood and
 used by Kabbalists now?
A:  I don't know.  I haven't yet discussed
 this with them.  After I make up my mind
 on the basis of the texts, then I will go
 to them and see what they think.

Q:  What about Ben Zoma:  how was he seen?
A:  As someone who had progressed to a
 certain level, but who was not able to
 enter metaphysics, so to speak.  He forced
 himself into the Physics, but he became
 mentally disturbed.  The ecstatic
 Kabbalists  took him as one who had
 entered the strong experience and become
 crazy.  Others assumed that he had been
 damaged by the demonic world.  But he did
 not receive much treatment as an ideal
 type, unlike Akher or Ben Azai, or Elisha
 the prototype of imperfection.  Ben Zoma
 was not a strong type, he was not so
 interesting, so he was not taken as a
 type.  And I have not found him
 interesting enough to discuss much
 myself...

Q:  What if you are in a group having
 religious experiences, can you then go out
 into the world to change the world?
A:  Look:  most Kabbalists functioned at a
 social level.  Some were leaders, andwere
 very important members of their
 communities, so often they naturally were
 social figures.  But even ecstatic
 Kabbalists who were sometimes very
 individualistic became messianic in their
 external activities.  Most known
 Kabbalists contributed the perfection of
 the Divine, or of individual perfection,
 in service of messianic aims.  The same by
 the way is often true of non-Jewish
 mysticism, which could also be a way to
 energize the personality to return to the
 group in an activist manner.